Sonia Furstenau Explained

Sonia Furstenau
Residence:Victoria, British Columbia
Office:Leader of the Green Party of British Columbia
Term Start:September 14, 2020
Predecessor:Adam Olsen (interim)
Office1:Deputy Leader of the Green Party of British Columbia
Alongside1:Jonina Campbell
Leader1:Andrew Weaver
Term Start1:November 2, 2016
Term End1:September 14, 2020
Predecessor1:Adam Olsen
Successor1:Jonina Campbell[1]
Assembly2:British Columbia Legislative
Constituency Am2:Cowichan Valley
Term Start2:May 9, 2017
Term End2:September 21, 2024
Predecessor2:Bill Routley
Successor2:Debra Toporowski
Birth Date:8 June 1970
Birth Place:Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Party:Green Party of British Columbia
Profession:High school teacher
Alma Mater:University of Victoria
Spouse:Blaise Salmon
Children:1

Sonia Furstenau (born June 8, 1970) is a Canadian politician who is currently the leader of the Green Party of British Columbia. Furstenau served as the MLA for Cowichan Valley from 2017 until 2024, when she unsuccessfully attempted to switch constituencies.

Early life and career

Furstenau was raised in Edmonton, the child of German immigrants. She attended McKernan Elementary/Junior-High School, where she was in Grade 2 in 1977–78. She went on a trip to Germany with her father, including his native East Germany, where she learned to appreciate the value of democracy by observing the lack of it. She later helped her mother protest against dumping in the vicinity of Elk Island National Park in the early 1990s.[2]

Furstenau attended the University of Victoria starting at age 20, attaining an MA in History and a Bachelor of Education. After teaching in Victoria-area schools, her work took her to Shawnigan Lake in 2011. Here she encountered the dumping of toxic soil close to the water supply, which led her to citizen involvement and to becoming a director of the Cowichan Valley Regional District (see below).[3]

Prior to holding elected office, Furstenau was a high school teacher in Victoria and Shawnigan Lake.

Political career

In 2014, Furstenau started her political career when she was elected to serve as a director of Electoral Area B within the Cowichan Valley Regional District. This was after two years working with the Shawnigan Resident's Association to protest and appeal a British Columbia Provincial permit that allowed the siting of a landfill on the banks of the community's source of drinking water, Shawnigan Lake.

Furstenau was elected to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia in the 2017 provincial election to represent the electoral district of Cowichan Valley.[4] On November 2, 2016, Green Party leader Andrew Weaver announced that Furstenau would replace Adam Olsen as one of the deputy leaders of the party. After Weaver stepped down as party leader, Furstenau announced her candidacy for the leadership of the party;[5] [6] she was elected leader on September 14, 2020.[7]

On January 31, 2024, Furstenau announced that she will run in Victoria-Beacon Hill during the 2024 provincial general election.[8]

2024 provincial election campaign

The 2024 provincial election campaign had its first highlight in the Oct 8 televised All-Candidates' Meeting.[9] In a 90-minute exchange with Premier Eby and Conservative MLA Rustad, MLA Furstenau confronted the two party leaders with questions on affordable housing, healthcare, the environment and natural disaster and increasing extreme-weather events.[10] Furstenau expressed her disagreement with her opponents in the statement: "I feel like I live in a different place from John Rustad — his vision of B.C. is one that is dark and gloomy," while reminding Premier Eby of some NDP promises since 2020 (from 2017 to 2020 the Greens were supporting an NDP minority government) that came short,[11] especially the government's response to the toxic drug overdose crisis.

In the election, Furstenau was defeated in the riding of Victoria-Beacon Hill, a long-time NDP strong hold,[12] by NDP incumbent Grace Lore.[13] [14] On 23 October in a press conference with the two Green MLAs elect, Furstenau declared that she will stay on a BC Green leader and assist in the preparations of the new Green 2-person caucus she is no longer a member of since her defeat.[15]

Personal life

Furstenau is married to Blaise Salmon[16] who works as a financial planner and has been elected as the local director for the Mill Bay/Malahat district of the Cowichan Valley Regional District.[17] She raised a child as a single mother while at university, taking on book-keeping jobs to support herself and her child.[18]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jonina Campbell .
  2. Web site: About – Re-Elect Sonia Furstenau for Cowichan Valley. 29 November 2021. 30 April 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210430132611/https://www.soniafurstenau.ca/about/. live.
  3. Web site: About – Re-Elect Sonia Furstenau for Cowichan Valley. 29 November 2021. 30 April 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210430132611/https://www.soniafurstenau.ca/about/. live.
  4. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/bc-greens-historic-wins-1.4107747 "Greens celebrate 'historic' B.C. wins amid minority uncertainty"
  5. News: CBC News . Sonia Furstenau announces she's running for leader of B.C. Green Party . January 30, 2020 . . January 27, 2020 . 30 September 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200930052801/https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/after-andrew-weaver-s-exit-b-c-green-mla-set-to-make-announcement-about-future-with-party-1.5441601 . live .
  6. News: CTV News . Sonia Furstenau to run for BC Green Party leadership . January 30, 2020 . . January 27, 2020 . 31 January 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200131020917/https://vancouverisland.ctvnews.ca/sonia-furstenau-to-run-for-bc-green-party-leadership-1.4785332 . live .
  7. News: Sonia Furstenau elected new B.C. Green Party leader . September 14, 2020 . . September 14, 2020 . 22 September 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200922064226/https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/bc-green-party-new-leader-1.5715867 . live .
  8. News: . 2024-01-31 . B.C. Greens leader plans to run in different riding for next election . 2024-01-31 . . en.
  9. Web site: DCHP-3 all-candidates meeting . 2024-10-09 . dchp.arts.ubc.ca.
  10. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/bc-televised-debate-election-2024-wrap-1.7346905
  11. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/bc-televised-debate-election-2024-wrap-1.7346905
  12. Web site: Sidaway . Kori . 2024-10-15 . 'Extremely tight race': Battle for Victoria-Beacon Hill heats up . 2024-10-20 . CHEK . en-CA.
  13. News: CP NewsAlert: B.C. Green Leader Sonia Furstenau loses seat after changing ridings . October 19, 2024 . Nanaimo News Now . October 19, 2024.
  14. Web site: Carey . Charlie . 2024-10-20 . Election BC: Greens Leader Sonia Furstenau loses seat . 2024-10-20 . CityNews Vancouver . en.
  15. https://www.cbc.ca/player/play/video/9.6544358
  16. Web site: 2022-01-09 . Shaking up the status quo: Sonia Furstenau aims high . 2024-01-15 . Northern Beat . en-US.
  17. Web site: https://www.civicinfo.bc.ca/election-results-v3/index.php?select-year=2018&select-view-by=regionaldistrict&localgovernmentid=160?select-year=2018&select-view-by=regionaldistrict&localgovernmentid=160 . CIVICINFOBC . 15 January 2024.
  18. https://bcgreens2024.ca/sonia-furstenau-profile/